
1. Idea - valuation is 0, nada, null...I don't know how else to put it, however ideas don't get financed. They're are a necessary element in one of the next stages, but on their own, they're practically worthless.
2. Technology/Product - up to a few tens of thousands of dollars. In a few cases a bit more, but not much. This would a typically be an angel round, where founders have some code and a prototype, but they need an engineer or two to get it a bit further.
3. Distribution - when the technology is ready and service/product done, you want this thing to spread like a virus. It might take to recode the service several times, change focus, poke the market.... You need to demonstrate that the thing is growing and gets used on a massive scale. This is quite often a strong angel, or early stage VC stuff. If you're really successful, you'll raise up to 2M USD. More realistically you're looking between 0.5 and 1M USD.
4. Revenue - You need to have significant revenue, closing in on profitability with a reasonable team, payed properly, 6+ guys, and you can already smell the profits in the following months. That's the VC's sweet spot. If you can show that by adding 2 sales guys or a product + sales guy or something in that sort, you can significantly increase revenue, you hit the jack pot. That's a proper A round and you're looking at 3-5M USD.
That's it. As always, things are not black and white, stages overlap, however the concept is there. The lesson is that it's worth to set your expectations.
Probably worth mentioning that you are talking about web/software startups.
ReplyDeleteOther industries might need and can expect higher amounts at each stage.